• SinningStromgald@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Same reason grocery stores toss perfectly good food in locked dumpsters in lieu of donating it.

    The only chain place with fresh food that donates their extra at the end of the day is Panera.

      • Obinice@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        Interesting, here in the UK they sell it at a discount, which greatly helps us poorer people afford food.

        Ironically if it’s all donated to food banks instead, I’d never see it and would struggle more - I may be poor but I can afford food so I don’t want to take away from what others might need more than me.

        The whole system is sadly broken anyway, so much food, yet so many hungry :-(

        • Apathy Tree@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 hours ago

          There’s a place near me that sells under-selling, damaged package, and past-sell-by-date processed food for a super steep discount. It’s priced like being in the 90s or early 00s. They buy it from grocery store distributors who collect items that are “returned” to them by the store, and it’s run by Amish which don’t seem bound by quite the same regulations…? Not entirely sure how they are allowed to do that, though there’s another place in the opposite direction that isn’t Amish and does the same thing, so maybe it’s just allowed here.

          Since most packaged food is still good well beyond the sell-by date, this means I can buy dry goods, shelf-stable microwave meals, and condiment sauces, and fill my car trunk/boot for about $100. It’s pretty out of the way, so I only make it there every few months, but I stock up heavily when I go. I’d probably have needed food assistance or just starved if I hadn’t found that place. (I prefer not to use it since my understanding is that it’s not a forever benefit even if you need it forever, and circumstances may warrant use later)

          Have to be super careful about what sorts of things you buy, some of it goes stale or separates a lot faster than other things, but it’s all still edible, and if I get stuff that’s not tasty to me, my chickens eat it and poop out eggs, so it’s not really a loss.

    • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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      3 hours ago

      I worked in a grocery store that had a little pizza making section. End of the day they’d throw out a lot of pizza. Management absolutely did not want employees to grab some at the end of the day.

      Well, I was friends with the guy who worked there so he’d “throw it out” into my possession. I had a lot of free pizza back then.

      Nowadays there’s an app “too good to go” where you can get cheap food at the end of the day from places. Not as good as free, but like four slices of pizza for $5 isn’t bad.

    • ReluctantMuskrat@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      They used to dump them in unlocked dumpsters but people figured that out and started pilfering the dumpsters. My dad, not poor at all but quite frugal/cheap, somehow heard about this and started taking me as a kid to go dumpster diving with him. It was crazy the amount of food we brought home for those couple years before places started locking the dumpsters. And there were a lot of people driving up and going through them just like us.